0 a warning to consider something before taking any more action, or a statement that limits a more general statement: --
1 a warning, for example about the use or effectiveness of something: --
One caveat: Know when passengers must be back on board the plane.
2 a warning to consider something before doing anything more: --
One caveat: while the plans can offer an opportunity to accumulate significant wealth over time, they cannot guarantee the safety of employee contributions.
3 a statement that limits a more general statement: --
Behind every set of statistics there's always a caveat.
Before we turn to the experimental results, a caveat is in order concerning their interpretation and in particular about cross-linguistic comparability.
A few preliminary caveats must be made at the outset.
However, it is equally plausible that - qualifications and caveats aside - square objects are disposed to look square.
The caveat that there is no "typical" murmur of a ventricular septal defect must be noted.
It is one thing to give customers what they want under a caveat emptor condition.
But these are minor caveats when the writing is as good as this: the reach so wide, the thought so intense, the prose so vivid.
There are, of course, caveats to be made here: not everything is possible through these two mechanisms.
There is a caveat to this conclusion, however, since the long-term effects of institutions are not directly estimated through the pooled time-series design.